Why NPR's David Gilkey Was In The Roughest Part Of Afghanistan : ParallelsThe NPR photographer kept heading back to the front lines in Afghanistan to gauge how the Afghan military was faring against the Taliban. It's a story that has largely been ignored.

Why David Gilkey Was In The Roughest Part Of Afghanistan

A member of the Afghan army looks on as an artillery gun fires at Taliban fighters in the hills of Nangahar Province, in eastern Afghanistan, in 2015. NPR photographer David Gilkey, who was killed Sunday, embedded with the Afghan military on multiple occasions to see how it was faring in its fight against the Taliban.
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A member of the Afghan army looks on as an artillery gun fires at Taliban fighters in the hills of Nangahar Province, in eastern Afghanistan, in 2015. NPR photographer David Gilkey, who was killed Sunday, embedded with the Afghan military on multiple occasions to see how it was faring in its fight against the Taliban.

David Gilkey/NPR

When NPR photographer David Gilkey was killed by Taliban fire in a roadside ambush Sunday, he was doing what he always did — chasing an important story in a dangerous place. He did this from Afghanistan to Iraq to Liberia and many other places along the way.

Yet this trip with NPR Pentagon correspondent Tom Bowman held special significance. As the American military steadily withdrew its combat forces from Afghanistan, David and Tom spent the past several years embedding with Afghan forces to see if they were up to the job of defeating the Taliban.

It's a critical story that has largely been ignored. After 15 years of U.S. involvement in the Afghan war, the conflict has disappeared from the front pages in the U.S., and American interest has waned.

They spoke with American officers, some of the nearly 10,000 U.S. military personnel who are still in Afghanistan to advise and assist the Afghans. They interviewed Afghan officers to get their assessment of an army that's still very much a work in progress.

Afghan soldiers plot coordinates for artillery strikes against Taliban fighters in the hills of Nangahar Province in eastern Afghanistan in 2015.
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Afghan soldiers plot coordinates for artillery strikes against Taliban fighters in the hills of Nangahar Province in eastern Afghanistan in 2015.

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Yet David and Tom knew there was only one way to really find out how good or bad the Afghan forces are — by spending time with them on the front lines.

"We're staying with them, we're sleeping with them, we're eating with them, and we're going on patrol with them. Every day," David said last month just before he left for Afghanistan. "It's a look you only get by going there."

Commandos practice taking up a security position. With the U.S. combat role over in Afghanistan, the country's security now depends on people like the Afghan commandos.
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Commandos practice taking up a security position. With the U.S. combat role over in Afghanistan, the country's security now depends on people like the Afghan commandos.

David Gilkey/NPR

On Sunday, David and Tom were traveling in armored Humvees with the Afghan military on a road near Marjah, a southern agricultural town that's synonymous with opium production and a strong Taliban presence.

The Afghan military had recently cleared Taliban fighters out of the area, and the NPR journalists were having a look for themselves when their three-car convoy came under Taliban fire.

"We started taking machine-gun fire. We could hear mortars coming in," said Tom, who was in a separate Humvee from David.

David's vehicle was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade and he was killed along with Afghan journalist Zabihullah Tamanna, who was working as an interpreter for NPR. An Afghan soldier who was driving the vehicle was also killed.

In Tom's vehicle, which also included NPR producer Monika Evstatieva, an Afghan general ordered the driver to turn around and Tom and Monika made it back to the Afghan military base uninjured.

An Afghan commando instructor looks out over his troops during a training exercise last year.
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An Afghan commando instructor looks out over his troops during a training exercise last year.

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Over the course of the next couple of hours, the Afghan military brought the bodies of David and Zabihullah back to the base.

"He was a real character," Tom said of David. "I know people in the newsroom called him 'Smiley,' because he never smiled. He was really gruff. But he's a real sensitive soul. He's a real, complete artist."

"His pictures are absolutely beautiful and the ones he recently took, on a mission we went on, were just unbelievable," Tom told NPR's Morning Edition. "Any story you did, he made it better, because of his pictures."